Dr. Jay Bhattacharya
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
our mission is to advance the health of every single american no matter what race you are no matter what what sex you are no matter what your beliefs are there's no democrat or republican science there's just science right we're committed to that um but we shouldn't be doing work that politicizes science and we've managed to get rid of almost all of it uh at least i hope most almost all of it there's there's a
our mission is to advance the health of every single american no matter what race you are no matter what what sex you are no matter what your beliefs are there's no democrat or republican science there's just science right we're committed to that um but we shouldn't be doing work that politicizes science and we've managed to get rid of almost all of it uh at least i hope most almost all of it there's there's a
our mission is to advance the health of every single american no matter what race you are no matter what what sex you are no matter what your beliefs are there's no democrat or republican science there's just science right we're committed to that um but we shouldn't be doing work that politicizes science and we've managed to get rid of almost all of it uh at least i hope most almost all of it there's there's a
Let me let me make the analogy with something that happened at the USAID, you know, the agency that the Doge sort of looked into first at the USAID. They were doing some really good things like they had a program called PEPFAR, really universally popular because it provided low, cheap HIV drugs to patients in Africa, saving millions of lives. It was a really good program.
Let me let me make the analogy with something that happened at the USAID, you know, the agency that the Doge sort of looked into first at the USAID. They were doing some really good things like they had a program called PEPFAR, really universally popular because it provided low, cheap HIV drugs to patients in Africa, saving millions of lives. It was a really good program.
Let me let me make the analogy with something that happened at the USAID, you know, the agency that the Doge sort of looked into first at the USAID. They were doing some really good things like they had a program called PEPFAR, really universally popular because it provided low, cheap HIV drugs to patients in Africa, saving millions of lives. It was a really good program.
I've written about that program in the past. It's a program that was actually rescued and I think brought in by Marco Rubio into the State Department. The same agency had in it a program to add a third gender to the Bangladeshi census. Now, Bangladesh has all kinds of problems.
I've written about that program in the past. It's a program that was actually rescued and I think brought in by Marco Rubio into the State Department. The same agency had in it a program to add a third gender to the Bangladeshi census. Now, Bangladesh has all kinds of problems.
I've written about that program in the past. It's a program that was actually rescued and I think brought in by Marco Rubio into the State Department. The same agency had in it a program to add a third gender to the Bangladeshi census. Now, Bangladesh has all kinds of problems.
There's arsenic in the drinking water, hundreds of thousands of children dying of diarrheal illnesses, I mean, poverty at scale. And what the US government was doing was adding a third gender to its census.
There's arsenic in the drinking water, hundreds of thousands of children dying of diarrheal illnesses, I mean, poverty at scale. And what the US government was doing was adding a third gender to its census.
There's arsenic in the drinking water, hundreds of thousands of children dying of diarrheal illnesses, I mean, poverty at scale. And what the US government was doing was adding a third gender to its census.
If you take something that's good, you know, PEPFAR, and then you surround it and marble it with like absolute politicized nonsense, you leave the good things open to political attacks that should never happen.
If you take something that's good, you know, PEPFAR, and then you surround it and marble it with like absolute politicized nonsense, you leave the good things open to political attacks that should never happen.
If you take something that's good, you know, PEPFAR, and then you surround it and marble it with like absolute politicized nonsense, you leave the good things open to political attacks that should never happen.
um and it was irresponsible for the leaders of of of the usaid to allow the good things to be surrounded and marbled with with with politicized nonsense um and uh i think that in a sense the transition is as to making sure the nih focuses on actual science that actually advances human health um that's that's what we've been doing um i you know i don't want to get too far into the budget because it's a budget fights are always not not fun to talk about but um
um and it was irresponsible for the leaders of of of the usaid to allow the good things to be surrounded and marbled with with with politicized nonsense um and uh i think that in a sense the transition is as to making sure the nih focuses on actual science that actually advances human health um that's that's what we've been doing um i you know i don't want to get too far into the budget because it's a budget fights are always not not fun to talk about but um
um and it was irresponsible for the leaders of of of the usaid to allow the good things to be surrounded and marbled with with with politicized nonsense um and uh i think that in a sense the transition is as to making sure the nih focuses on actual science that actually advances human health um that's that's what we've been doing um i you know i don't want to get too far into the budget because it's a budget fights are always not not fun to talk about but um
I think that there's a lot of support, even from the president himself wrote a letter to his science advisor, Michael Kratios, committing the U.S. to be the premier nation in biomedicine in the 21st century. And the NIH is going to play a key role in that aspiration.
I think that there's a lot of support, even from the president himself wrote a letter to his science advisor, Michael Kratios, committing the U.S. to be the premier nation in biomedicine in the 21st century. And the NIH is going to play a key role in that aspiration.